Caitlin Ambrozik

Junior Affiliate (PhD)

Caitlin Ambrozik is a doctoral student in Government at Cornell University. Ambrozik’s primary motive behind her doctoral research is to understand and evaluate policies and programs that counter terrorism. In doing so, her research focuses on an emerging topic within counter-terrorism studies known as countering violent extremism (CVE). Based on Ambrozik’s multi-method fieldwork, her research seeks to better understand the CVE policy making process and how the public perceives the concept of CVE. Her dissertation focuses on the CVE policy making process in the context of the United States. Until now, the local politics behind CVE has largely been missing from CVE scholarship. However, Ambrozik’s work sheds light on the political policy making process and provide empirically-based explanations for the variations in implementation. In the future, she plan to expand on my work on CVE to other components of counter-terrorism.

In a subsequent project, Ambrozik plans to develop a global database that tracks country-level counter-terrorism doctrine and practices across time. Using the US State Department’s Annual Country Reports on Terrorism, she plans to use the qualitative material in the reports to create the quantitative indicators of government counter-terrorism doctrine and practices.

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TSAS Affiliate

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ABOUT TSAS

The Canadian Network for Research on Terrorism, Security and Society engages more than 280 affiliates to conduct policy-relevant research on the threat of terrorism, security responses to terrorism, and the impact of both terrorism and securitization on Canadian society.